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What Is the Self-Study Instructional Audit?. An Overview of the Self-Study Instructional Audit Tool Deborah Davis ACC/NW Lab Jon Paden EED. What Is the Roadmap for This Session?. Quick description of the Instructional Audit Tool as a basis for the Self-Study Instructional Audit Tool
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What Is the Self-Study Instructional Audit? An Overview of the Self-Study Instructional Audit Tool Deborah Davis ACC/NW Lab Jon PadenEED
What Is the Roadmap for This Session? • Quick description of the Instructional Audit Tool as a basis for the Self-Study Instructional Audit Tool • Characteristics of the Self-Study and small group exploration of the Tool • Next steps and ways to approach the SS-IAT
What Is an Instructional Audit? • A state-selected, independent, audit team conducts a review of district instructional practices - using the Instructional Audit Tool (IAT) • Districts meeting certain criteria qualify to receive an instructional audit (e.g., AYP Level 2 or greater) • State law establishes the practice to examine 6 domains
What Are the Six Domains? • Curriculum • Assessment • Instruction • Supportive learning environment • Professional development • Leadership
What happens during the Instructional Audit? Audit team develops a snapshot of district instructional practices by the school level: • Document review • Focus groups & interviews with staff and students • Instruction observation The team combines these data sources to triangulate evidence and assign the rating “Meets” or “Does Not Meet”
What Happens As a Result of the Instructional Audit? • The audit team produces a Report of Findings for the Commissioner’s review • This report complements other data (e.g., SBAs, district conversations) to develop a plan: • E.g., stay the course, give recommendations, direct instructional actions, redirect funds for student learning benefit, replace personnel
Is The Instructional Audit Tool Valid? • Yes • Validation study completed through the Alaska Comprehensive Center, Northwest Lab, and WestEd in 2008 • The conclusion: Strong correlation between the audit tool’s assessment of a district and the district students’ proficiency levels
What Is This New Self-Study Instructional Audit Tool? (SS-IAT) • Based on Alaska’s Instructional Audit Tool • Incorporates changes made to Instructional Audit Tool based on considerable feedback from audited districts • To be implemented by districts and guided by an EED Technical Assistance Coach
What are Similarities between the IAT and SS-IAT? • Evidence-based • Provide diagnostic data to help with creation of improvement plans • Based on the six domains and 44 key elements within domains (including parent and community involvement key elements)
IAT conducted by external team IAT conducted over one week IAT uses a dichotomous rating And The Differences? SS-IAT conducted by internal team SS-IAT may take several weeks or months SS-IAT uses a 4-point rubric
So, What Is The SS-IAT? • An evidence-based self-study • A way to build awareness, buy-in and support for improvement efforts The end product is not a score; instead it is the identification of current strengths and limitations
Your SS-IAT assignment: • Number off to six • Curriculum • Assessment • Instruction* • Learning Environment • Professional Development • Leadership* 1. Skim pages 2-9 2. Review materials for your assigned domain 3. Teach home group about your domain 4. Discuss if and how you might use it
What are the Self-Assessment Materials? • Overview & Step-by-Step pgs. 2-5 • Sources of Evidence pgs. 6-7 • Glossary pgs. 8-9 • Introduction to Domain & Guiding Questions pgs. 10-46 • Domain Rubric “ • Domain Summary “
Options for use of the SS-IAT • One domain area • Some, but not all domains • All domain areas
Who is involved? SS-IAT is guided by: • An EED-trained technical assistance coach* The Self-Study is conducted by: • entire school staff or • small group of staff such as the leadership team *or trained district staff in winter 2010
Getting started • Review the rubric • Discuss the guiding questions • Locate the evidence necessary to make ratings for each domain • Reach consensus on ratings • Determine strengths and areas for improvement
Next steps…by September • Technical Assistance Coaches will be trained to guide school teams • Tool will be available electronically
Q & A • Can we do this self-study process on our own? • Does the self-study help with creation of improvement plans? • Is it best to do all the Domain areas at once?
Self-Study and PLCs… …a learning community consists of a group of people who take an active, reflective, collaborative, learning-oriented, and growth-promoting approach towards the mysteries, the problems and perplexities of teaching and learning. Mitchell & Sackney, 2001